I'm Not Flattered - Plagarism

17 Apr 2018
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writing

At the moment my blog doesn’t have all that many posts on it, and I really don’t consider myself a serious blogger. I write when I feel like it, and in whatever tone I’m feeling like writing in at the moment. Odd as it may seem, I’m not writing with the intent of being read. This doesn’t mean that I don’t care when people read my articles. It’s definitly a good feeling to recieve comments and engage in discussion, but I’m not motivated to find as many readers as possible. I don’t often share links to my blog posts on other sites, I simply write posts and visitors find them on search engines, or don’t find them at all.

Plagarism

Since I don’t consider myself a writer, until now I’ve never really taken the time to reflect on how I may feel if my work were to be plagiarized. Today I was forced to endure the feeling, and it’s not a very pleasant one. Recently I’ve migrated my blog from a Wordpress installation to Jekyll. As a result of this transition I’ve been checking up on my SEO ranking for older artciles. I came accross more than a few different copies of my work, published under many different names. The plagarism varied from sites displaying a complete copy of my article, title, text, and images left unaltered, to significantly reduced versions of an article composed entirely from plagarized snippets of my original.

Who’s Doing This & What’s the Motivation

My most copied article was Removing the 512MB size limit on All-in-One WP Migration Plugin. The post describes how to remove the imposed size limit on the free version of All-in-One WP Migration. I wrote this post to help others understand that there was a simple constant imposing the upload file-size limitation, and that by redeclaing the constant the limit could easily be increased. I used this technique for quite some time before writing about it, it seemed so simple that I didn’t even think it was worth writing about. I’m glad I did, because it helped so many people who had been searching for ways to do this, but didn’t know how. It felt pretty good to see so many people successfully make the simple modification. I’m really surprised the method has still been working for years after my original post.

Blackhat SEO & Offshore Wordpress Sites

Many of the copies I found of this article seemed to be on sites that published Wordpress related content. Their goal is to rank for all Wordpress related keywords they possibly can, and earn whatever revanue they can scrape from the traffic they generate. Many of these sites were offshore, and those don’t really bug me that much. I understand the game of internet marketing, and I understand how other countries do their thing.

Wannabe’s

What I initially found much more infuriating than the nameless Blackat SEO’s that copied my content, were the wanna be developers that put their own name on my work. I cannot see how comments on stolen work gratify a thief. If you steal someone’s work, you know you stole it. When you made the choice to copy the article, you made the judgement that the article was good, that it was something you wished represented you. You wished you could be seen as the article’s author. Take that motivation to be seen as a writer, and write something of your own. I can’t tell you the different between actual gratification, and empty gratification, you’ll need to experience that on your own.

Conclusion

Blogging has allowed me to track my progress over the years. By prodicing work that is your own, and then stamping it with a date, you’re able to go back measure your own growth. If you copy the work of others because you feel you’re not yet at the level of prodicing that type of work, don’t worry, you can get there. Get good enough by doing it yourself. This has also been a lesson to me on how to handle being plagiarized, I’m sure my reaction to it the next time will be much smoother.